Overall Dickens was sympathetic towards the French Revolution as he understood that the rich and powerful were ignorant to those poorer than them. However he voiced disapproval in how barbaric the revolution was with all it's unnecessary killing and murder.
"It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch of belief, it was the epoch of incredulity, it was the season of Light, it was the season of Darkness, it was the spring of hope, it was the winter of despair, ...". Charles Dickens in a Tale of Two Cities.
Liberals viewed the French Revolution as a breakthrough because it allowed for a new political order that limited the power of the government.
French is not a religion it is an nationality (and or a language). In view of this, the question can not be answered.
It felt threatened by the success of the new government.
No, it should be viewed as history. It was a civil war not unlike our own civil war.
The French Revolution was the beginning of the end for the feudal era; other European nations gradually became less dominated by aristocracy, and more democratic. Not that it was a smooth process; it took WW I to bring an end to the German and Austro-Hungarian monarchies.
Washington was unhappy about it but the Jeffersonians supported the French Revolution.
There was a strong political divide in the United States as to how to view the French Revolution. At the beginning, the majority perspective was positive, seeing the French Revolution as being parallel to the American Revolution. The minority perspective, which became more popular later, was that this upsurge against the traditional order was violent and unnecessary.
Liberals viewed the French Revolution as a breakthrough because it allowed for a new political order that limited the power of the government.
they veiwed it as a ruining of the nation and that they wanted nothing to do with the Brittish and Americans.
Liberals viewed the French Revolution as a breakthrough because it allowed for a new political order that limited the power of the government.
I don't know, that why I'm searching right now.
French is not a religion it is an nationality (and or a language). In view of this, the question can not be answered.
It felt threatened by the success of the new government.
It quickly became a symbol of the French Revolution, a blow to tyranny. Today, the French still celebrate July a 14 as Bastille Day.
the Philosophes' view that government restricted people's resources and power
No, it should be viewed as history. It was a civil war not unlike our own civil war.
They were horrified at how the French had mistreated their government and of all the bloodshed that had occured. They felt that they could no longer trust the French even though they had been allies during the American Revolution.